Wall/ render problems
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I recently built a small wall and 2 piers on a job. The walls were built of 7N concrete blocks and rendered with a scratch coat and float coat of render mixed 5:1.
The wall is 9 inch blockwork and the piers solid 18inch blockwork.
The footings were into decent ground but there was a layer of type 2 fill approx 18 inches deep so we went on down and a foot into original clay.
The paving falls away from the wall.
The wall is obviously sucking up moisture badly to the extent that its leaving tide marks on the render.
I am concerned that the render will be adversly affected in the long term.
Any thoughts or ideas on a solution? injected DPC?
Photos below
The wall is 9 inch blockwork and the piers solid 18inch blockwork.
The footings were into decent ground but there was a layer of type 2 fill approx 18 inches deep so we went on down and a foot into original clay.
The paving falls away from the wall.
The wall is obviously sucking up moisture badly to the extent that its leaving tide marks on the render.
I am concerned that the render will be adversly affected in the long term.
Any thoughts or ideas on a solution? injected DPC?
Photos below
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You should never render right to the floor. Should have installed a render stop/drip bead leaving a gap to the floor. Also did you install a dpc on the wall? The only way i see of sorting the problem out would be cut the render off of the bottom, install a dpc in the wall and install a drip bead and render down to that. But someone will probably have a better solution.
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I asked the spread who i have worked with on loads of sites and he said not to bother with waterproofer in the scratch coat. In hindsight i should have insisted.
I have been involved with a fair amount of exterior blockwork walls done in this same manor before and never had this problem?
I know a dpc and stop bead is the pukka job but as above this is a pretty common method round these parts with no i'll effects.
In my current thinking cutting a line and putting in a stop short of the paving is not the issue so much as the volume of water suggests to me the actual block sucking up water.
These photo's were taken after 2 dry days
I have been involved with a fair amount of exterior blockwork walls done in this same manor before and never had this problem?
I know a dpc and stop bead is the pukka job but as above this is a pretty common method round these parts with no i'll effects.
In my current thinking cutting a line and putting in a stop short of the paving is not the issue so much as the volume of water suggests to me the actual block sucking up water.
These photo's were taken after 2 dry days
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- Site Admin
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- Location: bedfordshire